Perhaps it’s not surprising that Wright posted the paper just days after another self-proclaimed Satoshi made a colossal fool of himself by claiming he’s the real Bitcoin inventor.

As CCN reported, a 42-year-old Pakistani national named Bilal Khalid claimed he was Satoshi Nakamoto. The only problem was, his outlandish tale defied belief. So naturally, the crypto industry mocked him back into anonymity.

However, Wright counters that “keys are not law. They don’t prove ownership of property rights, which never was the intention of bitcoin.”

“The concept that is counted consistently of ‘no keys, not your bitcoin’ is meaningless drivel. Very soon, you’re going to see just how foolish this idea is.”

Just yesterday (Aug. 21), an exhibit was entered into the docket of the $10 billion lawsuit filed against Wright by the estate of deceased computer genius Dave Kleiman.

The exhibit purports to be a 2008 email between Wright and Kleiman. In the email, Wright asks Kleiman for help editing a paper that he planned to release in a few months.

“I have been working on a new form of electronic money,” Wright allegedly wrote to Kleiman in March 2008. “I want you to be a part of it all.”

Tellingly, the actual Bitcoin white paper was released in August 2008.

This exhibit in the Ira Kleiman v. Craig Wright lawsuit purports to be an email between Wright and Dave Kleiman. (Exhibit)

Wright portends ominous fate for bitcoin

Despite claiming to have invented bitcoin, Craig Wright has recently turned against it.

As CCN reported, Wright says bitcoin has devolved into a perverted version of “his” original vision for the cryptocurrency. How? By becoming a vehicle for money-laundering, drug trafficking, and terrorism funding.

Wright has repeatedly warned the crypto industry that he’ll usher in a ruthless reckoning for bitcoin once he comes back into possession of his 1.1 million bitcoin trove in January 2020.

“A decade ago, I didn’t have the power or the resources to step in and do what is necessary to steward Bitcoin to where it needs to be,” Wright said. “I do now.”

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